What is the name meaning of SINAP. Phrases containing SINAP
See name meanings and uses of SINAP!SINAP
SINAP
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Wisdom
SINAP
SINAP
Girl/Female
Arabic, Bengali, Indian, Kannada, Muslim
To Walk with a Swinging Gait
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived on or by a ridge, Middle English rigge, or a habitational name from any of the places named with this word, as for example Ridge in Hertfordshire. The surname is also fairly common in Ireland, in County Galway, having been taken to Connacht in the early 17th century. The name is sometimes Gaelicized as Mac Iomaire; iomaire is modern Irish for ‘ridge’.
Boy/Male
Arabic
Vigil; Guard
Girl/Female
Australian, Danish
Motivator; Lovely; Beauty
Girl/Female
Gaelic Scandinavian
Powerful in battle.
Girl/Female
Hindu
The Moon
Boy/Male
Bengali, Hindu, Indian
God's Eye
Girl/Female
Hindu
A flowering vine
Girl/Female
Afghan, Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Muslim, Telugu, Turkish
Wise; Mature; Conscious; Pious; Righteous; Rightly Advised; Rationale; Pretend; Intelligent; Brave
Girl/Female
Tamil
Precious
SINAP
SINAP
SINAP
SINAP
SINAP
n.
A mild vesicatory; a sinapism; as, to apply draughts to the feet.
n.
The name of several cruciferous plants of the genus Brassica (formerly Sinapis), as white mustard (B. alba), black mustard (B. Nigra), wild mustard or charlock (B. Sinapistrum).
n.
A nitrogenous base, CO.(NH.C3H5)2, related to urea, extracted from mustard oil, and also produced artifically, as a white crystalline substance; -- called also diallyl urea.
v. i.
To have efficiency as an epispastic; to act as a sinapism; -- said of a blister, poultice, etc.
n.
A disused generic name for mustard; -- now called Brassica.
a.
Of or pertaining to mustard oil; specifically, designating an acid of the oleic acid series said to occur in mistard oil.
n.
A cruciferous plant (Brassica sinapistrum) with yellow flowers; wild mustard. It is troublesome in grain fields. Called also chardock, chardlock, chedlock, and kedlock.
n.
A glucoside found in the seeds of black mustard (Brassica nigra, formerly Sinapis nigra) It resembles sinalbin, and consists of a potassium salt of myronic acid.
a.
Of or pertaining to sinapine; specifically, designating an acid (C11H12O5) related to gallic acid, and obtained by the decomposition of sinapine, as a white crystalline substance.
n.
A substance which, by irritating the surface, excites action in the part to which it is applied, as a blister, an epispastic, a sinapism.
n.
A salt of sinapic acid.
n.
A glucoside found in the seeds of white mustard (Brassica alba, formerly Sinapis alba), and extracted as a white crystalline substance.
n.
A substance extracted from mustard seed and probably identical with sinalbin.
n.
An alkaloid occuring in the seeds of mustard. It is extracted, in combination with sulphocyanic acid, as a white crystalline substance, having a hot, bitter taste. When sinapine is isolated it is unstable and undergoes decomposition.
n.
A plaster or poultice composed principally of powdered mustard seed, or containing the volatile oil of mustard seed. It is a powerful irritant.